Thursday, November 14, 2019
Women no longer have to wear high heels to work in this big city
Women no longer have to wear high heels to work in this big city Women no longer have to wear high heels to work in this big city Women working in the Canadian province of British Columbia - which includes Vancouver - wonât be forced to wear heels at work any more.Government officials in the province, frequently just called âBC,â announced that corporate rules requiring women to wear heels were âunsafe and discriminatory.â The provinceâs existing Workers Compensation Act has been amended to liberate women from the requirements to wear pinching, painful high-heeled pumps.Premier Christy Clark commented on the new policy: âIn some workplaces in our province, women are required to wear high heels on the job. Like most British Columbians, our government thinks this is wrong. That is why weâre changing this regulation to stop this unsafe and discriminatory practice and adding an enforcement element by WorkSafeBC,â Clark said.BC already gives female employees protection against sexual harassment and gender-based discrimination as part of its Occupational Health and Safety Regulation and parts of its Human Rights Code.High heels increase injuriesThe new rule on high-heeled shoes comes because they are, as it turns out, are too dangerous - literally.Thatâs why the new rules come as part of the provinceâs workersâ safety rules. Previously, a local official, BC Green Party leader Andrew Weaver, had filed a private memberâs bill to achieve the same end, âdesigned to prevent employers from setting varying footwear and other requirements based on gender, gender expression or gender identity.â The new rules, however, wonât require a vote now as they would as a piece of legislation.And any woman who has worn heels can attest to how painful and dangerous they can be.âThe requirement to wear high heels in some workplaces is a workplace health and safety issue. There is a risk of physical injury from slipping or falling, as well as possible damage to the feet, legs and back from prolonged wearing of high heels while at work,â the statement said.WorkSafeBC will rep ortedly release a more thorough âworkplace guidelineâ by the end of this month.The new rule is a response to years of rumbling on the topic for a while now.Dress codes are updated for the futureThe move was expected, spurred by outrage over restaurants that required hostesses and other female employees to wear high heels, skirts, and other clothes designed to signal femininity. Canadian restaurant franchise Earls Kitchen + Bar in Vancouver announced that it would let employees wear black pants instead of skirts on the same day that the Ontario Human Rights Commission (OHRC) called for an end to âsexualized workplace dress codes.âPremier Christy Clark also commented on the move to ban mandatory heels last month, according to the BBC.Canada is not the only site of the revolution against heels.Last month, British lawmakers debated sexist workplace dress codes in Parliament after former temp worker Nicola Thorp started a petition to overthrow sexist workplace dress codes. Th orp became an icon to many English women after she refused to accept her companyâs rules requiring women to wear heels two to four inches high. She told to leave work in December 2015 because of her flat footwear.There was also a âparliamentary investigation into dress codes,â including âa review of equality legislation in light of the high heel issue,â according to the Guardian.
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